Hepatitis B virus (HBV) chronically infects 350-400 million people worldwide and causes 1 million deaths yearly. Current therapies prevent new viral genome formation, but do not target pre-existing viral genomic DNA, thus curing only ∼1/2 of patients. We targeted HBV DNA for cleavage using zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs), which cleave as dimers. Co-transfection of our ZFN pair with a target plasmid containing the HBV genome resulted in specific cleavage. After 3 days in culture, 26% of the target remained linear, whereas ∼10% was cleaved and misjoined tail-to-tail. Notably, ZFN treatment decreased levels of the hepatitis C virus pregenomic RNA by 29%. A portion of cleaved plasmids are repaired in cells, often with deletions and insertions. To track misrepair, we introduced an XbaI restriction site in the spacer between the ZFN sites. Targeted cleavage and misrepair destroys the XbaI site. After 3 days in culture, ∼6% of plasmids were XbaI-resistant. Thirteen of 16 clones sequenced contained frameshift mutations that would lead to truncations of the viral core protein. These results demonstrate, for the first time, the possibility of targeting episomal viral DNA genomes using ZFNs. ©The American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy.
CITATION STYLE
Cradick, T. J., Keck, K., Bradshaw, S., Jamieson, A. C., & McCaffrey, A. P. (2010). Zinc-finger nucleases as a novel therapeutic strategy for targeting hepatitis B virus DNAs. Molecular Therapy, 18(5), 947–954. https://doi.org/10.1038/mt.2010.20
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